Global study of clinicians by Elsevier finds nurses being left out of clinical AI adoption
Launched on International
Now in its fifth year, the global survey drew responses from 2,757 clinicians across 118 countries, including physicians and nurses.
Main Report Key Findings:
Survey respondents across geographies say they are stretched thin. While clinicians are turning to AI, implementation is falling short and some feel excluded from the process. Clinicians are not always turning to the right tools, with an over-reliance on non-clinical AI tools that lack sufficient evidence-based sources.
Nurse representation gap is stark:
- 41% of nurses say their views are rarely or never reflected in AI decision-making
- Just 19% of physicians feel nurses' views are not reflected.
Time remains the biggest constraint:
- 61% are seeing more patients and 56% are struggling to keep up with medical and tech advances.
Cases are getting more complex:
- Of those lacking sufficient time to provide good care, 53% report rising patient complexity - an area where clinical-specific, evidence-based AI tools are designed to help.
AI use is often not fit for purpose:
- 49% use AI at work (up 23 percentage points on 2024), but only a third of that group regularly use clinical-specific tools that provide validated, sourced information
- When not using clinical-specific tools, clinicians rely instead on publicly available, general AI tools that are consistently rated lower for reliability, authoritativeness and safety.
Strong belief in AI's importance:
- 80% say AI will become a critical assistant within the next decade, and nearly as many (79%) believe AI skills will be essential for clinician training.
But barriers are slowing adoption:
- 68% report insufficient AI training, and 60% lack confidence in AI governance and oversight - raising concerns about trust and reliability.
Jan Herzhoff, President of
Nurse-specific findings from Clinician of the Future 2026: Nurses Edition
In this inaugural Nurses Edition, findings show some notable differences between doctors and nurses on the topic of AI. Nurses are not utilizing AI as much as doctors, one of many findings and trends revealed in our report:
Nurse AI Usage lags significantly behind physicians:
- 41% of nurses use AI regularly vs. 57% of physicians
- Of these, 30% regularly use clinician-specific AI tools vs. 37% of physicians
But optimism is higher among nurses:
- 61% believe AI will improve care quality in 5 to 10 years vs. 55% of physicians
- 59% say AI will improve patient outcomes in the next 2 to 3 years vs. 53% of physicians
- 46% believe AI enhances their autonomy vs. 37% of physicians
Inclusion shapes perception:
- Fewer nurses (55%) than physicians (70%) believe AI will save them time in the next 2 to 3 years – this is likely caused by a lack of new AI tools developed for nurses, or they consider current AI tools as not benefiting them in their current role
Some important points doctors and nurses overwhelmingly agree on:
- Both doctors and nurses overwhelmingly agree that AI will not replace clinicians but instead will be a critical assistant for point of care and clinical decision support
- Over 60% say answers provided with transparent citations of high quality, evidence-based and peer-reviewed research will increase trust in AI.
To learn more and access the full Clinician of the Future 2026 report and Nurses Edition, visit here.
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